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Old April 25th 16, 05:02 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Dan Marotta
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Posts: 4,601
Default CCSC Landing Accident?

Notice the 500' wide Taxiway D at Moriarty Municipal Airport
,583m/data=%213m1%211e3.
Tow plane lands into the wind, taxis past glider staged on the taxiway,
rope is hooked up and tow is underway. During contests, 40+ gliders are
staged on the taxiway and one of 5 tow planes taxis past, glider is
pushed onto the runway, other tow planes are landing behind (approx
2,500' from threshold to staging point), it runs like a well-oiled
machine. No need for downwind landings.


On 4/25/2016 9:22 AM, kirk.stant wrote:
On Sunday, April 24, 2016 at 9:51:01 PM UTC-5, son_of_flubber wrote:
A disheartening repeat. A similar towplane-glider collision occurred Fall 2014. In that case, the towplane landed downwind due to noise abatement agreement.

The Pawnee can land extremely short. Seems like you should have a really good reason to land downwind.

As others have stated, it's really no big deal to land downwind in light winds. And there is a really good reason for doing it, as long as it can be done safely: efficient towing.

The whole point of aerotowing it to maximize launches. And landing downwind (or opposite traffic, if the wind is L & V or a crosswind) makes for an efficient operation - if done intelligently and the airfield configuration and traffic is suited to it.

I could argue that landing the towplane downwind is actually the SAFEST way to operate a towplane, especially on a single runway.

Of course, you do have to know how to fly your plane - and always follow the maxim that if you are going to crash, hit the softest, least expensive thing at the lowest speed possible...

Kirk


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Dan, 5J